IT‘S NOT ONLY CHINA: JAPAN AND KOREA‘S GROWING ROLES IN CENTRAL ASIA A CASPIAN POLICY CENTER POLICY BRIEF AUGUST 2021 ABOUT US The Caspian Policy Center (CPC) is an independent, nonprofit research think tank based in Washington D.C. Economic, political, energy, and security issues of the Caspian region constitute the central research focus of the Center. CPC aims at becoming a primary research and debate platform in the Caspian region with relevant publications, events, projects, and media productions to nurture a comprehensive understanding of the intertwined affairs of the Caspian region. With an inclusive, scholarly, and innova- tive approach, the Caspian Policy Center presents a platform where diverse voices from academia, business, and policy world from both the region and the nation’s cap- ital interact to produce distinct ideas and insights to the outstanding issues of the Caspian region. POLICY BRIEF 2 ABOUT THE AUTHOR Ambassador (Ret.) Robert F. Cekuta Author Ambassador to the Republic of Azerbaijan (2015 – 2018), Bob Cekuta has long and extensive experience as a top-level U.S. diplomat. Amb. Cekuta’s positions in the State Department included Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Energy Resources as well as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Energy, Sanctions, and Commodities. His overseas postings included the U.S. Embassies in Berlin and Tokyo where he oversaw the full range of economic, commercial, nonproliferation, and scientific relations. In addition, Amb. Cekuta was Deputy Chief of Mission in Albania and held positions in Vienna, Baghdad, Kabul, Johannesburg, and Sana’a, Yemen. Dante Schulz Author Dante Schulz is a Research Assistant with the Caspian Policy Center’s Energy and Economy Program. He is a senior at The George Washington University studying international affairs and history with a focus on Asia. He is interested in studying the implications of China’s increasing presence on the economic, political, and security affairs of the Greater Caspian Region. Dante also currently serves as the president of the Elliott School for International Affairs’ only gender-inclusive honor society and the senior video editor for his university’s independently run student newspaper. Jeremy Cohen Editor Jeremy Cohen serves as the Programs Assistant at the Caspian Policy Center. He completed his B.S. at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service with honors in International History and a minor in Russian. Cohen studied ethnic policy and conflict in Eurasia during the imperial and Soviet periods of Rus- sian history, and Russo-British relations in nineteenth-century Central Asia. At CPC, he pursues his interest in the Caspian region’s status as a political and economic crossroads both today and throughout history. He has worked pre- viously as an intern at the U.S. Embassies in Astana (Nur-Sultan) and Kyiv, and has organized non-profit educational programming in the Kyrgyz Republic. POLICY BRIEF 3 Introduction Japan and the Republic of Korea have important, long-standing relations with Central Asia that could be developed further to yield political as well as economic benefits. These relations are not always given the attention they are due, including by Washington, but this situation ought to be rectified for several reasons. In addition to the fact that both South Korea and Japan are leading world economies with the capacity to support Central Asia’s development, both are also close treaty allies of the United States sharing many of Washington’s concerns about the evolving global geostrategic picture. This reality can be especially important given China’s increasingly aggressive foreign policy in Central Asia, the growing unease among Central Asian publics over Chinese actions and intentions, and the shifts in Central Asia and the Greater Caspian region that may come with the U.S. pullout from Afghanistan. East Asian countries are accelerating their involvement in Central Asian affairs as they compete with one another to assert a role in the region and to address issues closer to home. China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is certainly a prime leitmotif in the thinking in Central Asian, Washington, and other capitals’ thinking about the region. However, in recent years both Japan and South Korea have boosted their presence in the region through cultural exchange programs, investments and other business engagement, high- level visits, and enhanced trade agreements. Thus, even if most public and policy-maker attention regarding East Asia and its present and potential role in the five Central Asian republics seems focused on the Belt and Road Initiative and other Chinese activities, greater attention should be given to South Korea and Japan and their potential role in the goals of stability, economic growth, and protecting the sovereignty and independence of Central Asian states. China’s Higher Profile Activities and the Growing Unease that Results In 2013, Chinese President Xi Jinping launched the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) to diversify China’s trade connections and to boost China’s political as well as economic influence by reviving the ancient Silk Road routes through a series of development and investment projects stretching from East Asia through Europe.1 Central Asia, along with countries in the Caucasus and elsewhere, embraced the influx of Chinese investment projects spurring regional and local economic growth. However, there is growing uneasiness towards China brewing in the region that, along with Beijing’s more competitive international stance and apprehensions in Washington and other capitals over Chinese intentions, is leading to a new dynamic. China is eager to tap into the Greater Caspian Region’s lucrative hydrocarbon and mineral resource extraction potential as well as to utilize the area to diversify global transport links. China’s large population and robust industrial growth have made it the world’s largest energy consumer.2 Central Asia’s vast hydrocarbon resource reserves and proximity are important factors in China’s engagement with the region. Turkmen POLICY BRIEF 4 natural gas exports to China increased from 3.5 bcm in 2010 to 33.2 bcm in 2019 while Turkmenistan’s natural gas sales to Russia dropped from 10.7 bcm in 2010 to only 1 bcm in 2019.3 China’s overall demand for natural gas is expected to double by 2035, a positive forecast for Central Asian governments looking for foreign exchange and income for governments’ budgets and national development. While governments have been eager to embrace Chinese investment, public opinion has faltered and Sinophobia has flared. The percentage of people in Central Asia expressing concern about China’s economic influence rose over the past year with anti-Chinese protests and clashes becoming more frequent. In total, there were 98 recorded anti- China demonstrations spanning Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan between January 2017 and mid-2020. In February 2020, hundreds of people in Kyrgyzstan protested the construction of a $280 million logistics center financed by a Chinese company, causing the company to withdraw from the country.4 Moreover, clashes between workers and villagers at a Chinese-owned gold mine in Kyrgyzstan halted operations.5 Kyrgyz protesters have called for the expulsion of foreigners, but the influx seems to be mostly short-term. In 2018, 35,215 Chinese citizens entered Kyrgyzstan, primarily to work on BRI projects.6 Furthermore, only 268 people from China acquired Kyrgyz citizenship from 2010-2018, of whom all but six were ethnic Kyrgyz. Frequent claims erupt that Chinese workers are marrying Kyrgyz women, but only 60 such marriages were recorded between 2010 and 2018.7 In addition, even as Central Asian authorities accept — and seek — Chinese investment, many of their countries’ citizens have developed negative attitudes towards China because of its treatment of Uyghurs and other Muslim and Turkic ethnic groups. In 2018, about 150 Kyrgyz protested in Bishkek to demand Beijing explain the reasons behind the detention of ethnic Kyrgyz in internment camps.8 Protesters also called for the Kyrgyz Republic’s government to expel foreigners residing in the country illegally in retaliation, including Chinese nationals. Similarly, in 2016, widespread protests erupted in Kazakhstan over proposed legislation that would allow foreigners to rent agricultural land for the first time in 25 years. Protesters argued that it would leave Kazakhstan susceptible to China. One protester in Aktobe, Kazakhstan shouted, “We can’t give land to the Chinese. If they come, then they won’t leave!”9 Kyrgyzstan’s and Tajikistan’s substantial debt with China is frequently flagged as problematic. Overall, 23 of the 68 countries involved in BRI projects have a high-risk debt ratio, including Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.10 In 2020, China’s Export-Import Bank held about 43.4 percent of Kyrgyzstan’s and 36.6 percent of Tajikistan’s debt.11 Analysts caution that China is initiating debt diplomacy in Central Asia. Taking advantage of the situation, for example, China would be able to use Kyrgyzstan’s and Tajikistan’s growing debt and their inability to repay on schedule to sway their domestic and foreign policies in favor of Beijing.12 POLICY BRIEF 5 Another concern is that Chinese investment projects do not do enough to stimulate local economies. Chinese projects in Kyrgyzstan reserve 70 percent of available jobs for Chinese engineers and technicians, while only 30 percent of jobs are available for local hires.13 However, as ethnic solidarity and skepticism
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